It's not made a big deal of or even really mentioned outright (in the anime, anyway), but Accelerator is Good with Numbers as one of the necessary abilities to actually use his esper ability properly. The nerf he gets is actually based on brain damage that affects his mathematics ability and requires a ten thousand personHive Mind to correct for a mere 15 minutes at a time. It gets better, as GROUP's enhancements are able to extend his Esper Mode to 30 minutes, then he himself manages to reduce his battery consumption by 90 percent so he can use it for undertaking longer missions.

The supplementary manga revealed that, much to the competitive Alisa's chagrin, both Nanoha and Fate are like this. Fate especially, to the point where Nanoha's sister goes to her for help on her high school math homework even though Fate's in elementary school. The same chapter also mentioned that the magic in the series requires a good bit of math, so being good with numbers is one of the reasons why they're both top mages.

There's also Hayate, who is the only known member of the TSAB with a SS ranking. Since she didn't develop her powers like everyone else she's not as good with spell control and multitasking, and has to have Long Arch or Reinforce aim for her.

In Code Geass, several of Lelouch'sHumongous Mecha require his superior mathematical skills, including his Shinkiro's absolute defense shield and the anti-FLEIJA device which required incredibly complex calculations to be input within 19 seconds of use.

Fushimi Saruhiko from K is revealed to be this in the interview with Misaki on the Drama CD. He manages to solve an equation Misaki came up with (just spouting numbers, basically) in a split second.

Misaki: Alright. Here we go~ Question: What is 37 + 21 - 44 x 17 / 4?

Saruhiko: 59.5

Misaki: ...Eh?

Saruhiko: 59.5. But if you calculate it in proper order note multiplication and division first, then addition and subtraction it would be -129.

Cocoa of Is the Order a Rabbit? may be very spacey, but she is something of a mathematics savant, able to calculate large sums instantly and can count prime numbers up to the thousands.

A character in Psychometrer, continuation of Psychometrer Eiji, fits this trope well. He was first introduced as a carefree and seemingly idiot guy but was soon revealed after his Unlucky Childhood Friend died from hit-and-run disguised as a train accident to be a math genius. In later appearance during "Heart Collector" case, he conducted calculations for geographic profiling in a relatively short time without pen and papers. In fact, his depicted math skill is so good he's able to predict someone's death.

Comic Books

Teen Genius Amadeus Cho from The Incredible Hercules can do advanced physics in his head, complete with glowing diagrams around him. He's claimed to be good enough that he can use math to stop a charging rhino with a grape seed, and proved it when he fought the freaking Hulk.

Superman: Red Son establishes that Lex Luthor is a super-genius scientist at STAR Labs. This isn't really surprising, but this trope comes in when he casually hands his OSS handler a formula to balance the economy. However, he says it's just the principles, and the Treasury will have to do the number-crunching for the specifics.

Fan Fic

The Alternative Universe premise of a Harry Potter fan fic The Arithmancer by White Squirrel is that Hermione is this: both a lightning calculator and a mathematics prodigy. (Also a part of its premise is that Arithmancy is not just about divination with numbers but also about spell creation and modification, which makes said trait highly relevant.)

Films — Animated

In Zootopia, Judy Hopps proves herself to be this when she calculates just how much (untaxed) income Nick Wilde has earned with his scams, while blackmailing him into helping her investigation by threatening him with charges of tax evasion.

Judy: Two hundred dollars a day, 365 days a year since you were twelve. That's two decades, so times 20 which is $1,460,000, I think! I mean, I am just a "dumb bunny", but we are good at multiplying.

Films — Live-Action

In The Dark Knight, Lau explicitly states that he is "good with calculation" while attempting to betray the whole Gotham mafia. He intends to leave with the money they entrusted him with. Had it not been for Batman and his brutal ways, he would have been able to actually make it. Though it is quite possible that the Joker himself had been planning it all since the very beginning — he is quite the Crazy-Prepared guy.

Averted with Leaven, who initially notices the pattern of prime numbers marking traps and so is tapped as the brain of the group. But as Quentin applies pressure and insists that she has "a gift", she fires back that he could do the same and should chip in.

Wynn from the prequel Cube Zero. Depending on how you interpret the ending, he may be the same person as Kazan.

Ben Campbell from the movie 21, but that's to be expected when he counts cards as a part time job. His Establishing Character Moment is him verbally tallying up a complicated order for a customer at a clothing store, including knocking off part of the price by applying his own employee discount towards the order, all without aid of a pen and paper or calculator. In the trailer, the math is written out on screen for the benefit of the audience, though that bit was left out in the movie itself.

John Nash of both real life and the biographic film A Beautiful Mind. He manipulates glasses of water to alter the optic lines refracting through them to match a tie on the other side, solves complex cryptograms based on the Sierpinski Gasket in his head and revolutionizes all economic theory since Adam Smith. He's also crazy as a loon.

At the end of the third Alternate Universe live-action Death Note movie, L adopts a Thai kid who's good with math. It's heavily suggested the kid grows up to be Near.

Harold Crick in Stranger Than Fiction. A routine occurrence in his life is being given math equations by his coworkers, which he solves in his head instantly.

Good Will Hunting. Will's genius is "discovered" while he's working as a janitor at MIT. In just a few minutes, he solves an impossibly complex combinatorics problem that was left on the chalkboard after everyone went home. Prof. Lambeau had given his students the entire semester to work it out.

In The Sunset Limited, Black learned to do arithmetic with big numbers in his head while in the jailhouse.

Black: Numbers is the black man's friend. Butter and eggs. Crap table. You quick with numbers, you can work the mojo on you brother. Confiscate the contents of his pocketbook.

Crossed with I Thought Everyone Could Do That in Matilda, where Matilda, on her first day of school, unhesitatingly answers a multiplication problem the teacher was using as an example of what the kids might be able to solve in several years. The teacher has to use a calculator to confirm the answer, and is suitably impressed.

In the film DarkmanIITheReturnofDurant, Durant's henchman Edward is able to calculate the exact amount that henchman Rollo had stolen from Durant over the two and a half years he was in a coma.

Literature

In Holes, Zero is shown to be able to work out "26 x 2 = 52" and "26 / 5 = 5 with a remainder of 1" in his head instantly (and also to have good spatial logic), despite having no education whatsoever. Whenever Stanley asks how he got the answer, Zero simply replies, "That's just what it is", implying a Matilda-esque "instant calculator" ability.

Matilda, of course. At age 5, she can correctly answer seemingly any arithmetic operation instantly in her head, even if the numbers involved are in the hundreds or thousands. It's not known whether there's any limit at all to how high or arbitrary the numbers can be. And apparently she herself isn't entirely sure how she does it — when asked how she solved a multiplication operation involving numbers far beyond the 12 x 12 multiplication table, she hesitates and replies uncertainly, "I simply multiplied [X] by [Y] and got [Z]. I don't really know how else to explain it."

Andrew Jackson "Slipstick" Libby from Robert A. Heinlein's Future History series. In his introductory short story "Misfit", he replaces a spaceship navigation computer by performing all spatial calculations needed to navigate the ship in real time in his head. And his mathematical genius comes to light when he warns of a critical calculation error made in setting a small nuclear charge based on what he's learned about laying the charges just by watching the officer making the calculations. ("Slipstick" is an in-universe nickname for a slide rule, a type of analog calculation aid common before hand-held calculators got good enough to do things like logarithms.)

Also from Heinlein, Deety Carter from The Number of the Beast is as fast a calculator as Slipstick Libby. She also has a photographic memory and an incredibly precise circadian rhythm — i.e., a clock in her head. She's a slight subversion, though, in that she says that her lightning calculator ability is pointless with computers around (except that she can see a glitch in a program much more easily than most people).

Romeo "Mo'Steel" Gonzalez from Remnants, able to tell how many years and days he had been in stasis with just a glance at a counter showing how many minutes had passed. It totaled "five-hundred years, twelve days, and some spare change."

Wraith Squadron's Voort "Piggy" saBinring is an enhancedGammorrean, and a math genius. During dogfights, while flying and fighting on his own, Piggy is capable of keeping track of his squadronmates and the enemy, and frequently chimes in with suggestions such as "Three, recommend you break left now" and "Nine, recommend you fire now." At the end of Solo Command, his realization about the true nature of an elite enemy squadron helps save the day.

Otto Malpense from H.I.V.E. Series is the epitome of this trope; he figures out the equation that a computer is using to generate a bunch of moving lasers in his head, closes his eyes, and does the equivalent of walking in between raindrops, without getting hit. Justified, seeing as he's a geneticially-altered clone designed to have a brain with roughly the same processing power as a uber-intelligent AI, able to think both like a human and like a machine, and interact remotely with complicated computer systems and brush aside their security networks.

Even Otto admits that Laura is better with numbers than he is. As she is trying to decrypt a message, her computer is sabotaged. Her solution? Go to another computer and regurgitate thousands upon thousands of unintelligible characters from memory. Shortly afterwards, she figures out the encryption. And she, unlike Otto, doesn't have a genetically augmented brain.

In Scott Westerfeld's Midnighters trilogy, one of the special abilities you can have if you were born at midnight (and probably the most useful) is the ability to do lengthy, complex mathematical calculations easily in your head.

Mark McHenry from Star Trek: New Frontier is specifically good with warp calculations, headings, speeds, and anything else related to navigation and piloting, much like the Star Trek examples below. In fact, at one point, a character specifically compares him to Data, in the "OK, the last time someone was this good, he was an android; what's up with this one?" sense. We eventually learn that Mark is a descendent of Apollo (from the original series), and linked at some basic level to the universe at large.

The Bursar of Unseen University is this. Years ago, he was "a man whose idea of an exciting time had once been a boiled egg", and he has been driven totally, completely insane over the course of several books by Archchancellor Ridcully's habit of shouting at him and generally being as Hammy as possible. However, if you ask the Bursar a question that has anything to do with math (as his title suggests) he is able to answer it no matter which reality curve his mind is riding at the time. Since it's difficult to tell if he's really all right after things like nasty shocks, in later books this becomes a way of diagnosing him; if he can still answer a math question correctly and immediately, he's perfectly fine. Ridcully even seems to know this:

Chair of Indefinite Studies: I don't see why. Just because he can do things with numbers doesn't mean everything else is fine. Ridcully: Doesn't need to be. Numbers is what he has to do. The poor chap might be slightly yo-yo, but I've been reading about it. He's one of these idiot servants. Dean: Savants. The word is savants, Ridcully. Ridcully: Whatever. Those chaps who can tell you what day of the week the first of Grune was a hundred years ago — Bursar: — Tuesday — Ridcully: — but can't tie their boot laces.

By Unseen Academicals, however, he has either lost several more of his faculties or just been retconned into an incompetent — Unseen University's finances are in a mess and Ponder Stibbons has had to take on the Bursar's job (in addition to his twelve official positions, and probably just about everything else that needs to get done, ever) because he "regards the decimal point as a nuisance". An Alternate Character Interpretation of this is that after discovering imaginary numbers and n-dimensional manifolds in The Science of Discworld, he refuses to descend from higher maths back to boring old arithmetic, and is trying to do the accounts with aleph-null and "umpt".

Granny Weatherwax is described in Maskerade as "grudgingly literate, but keenly numerate". It takes her seconds to deduce how much Nanny Ogg is being screwed by the publisher of her cookbook, even taking into consideration things like the cost of materials and distribution. She is also able to figure out the finances of the opera house, which were expertly tampered with and deliberately obfuscated to hide an embezzlement scam.

Pyramids introduces the greatest mathematician on the Disc... "You Bastard", a camel. Apparently, Discworld camels are secretly alarmingly intelligent and spend most of their time doing extremely complex equations in their heads. Although if they are bothered enough by some puny human, they can revert to good old trajectory calculation for a wad of spit in a heartbeat. In You Bastard's case, he's at the very least good enough to know exactly where to stomp in a spatial rift created by a nasty temporal clusterfuck in order to get inside the actual space the rift is hiding. It's...an odd moment.

Mr. Bent in Making Money is exceedingly good with numbers, so much so that it's a momentous bank-closing event when he makes a mistake. He also finds the imprecision of the Bank clocks "offensive" and fixes them several times a day. By the end of the book we find out that he was raised by a caravan of traveling accountants after running from the circus.

Talen from The Elenium is of the "can do normal math really fast" variety, which he claims developed from practice, and the need for a thief to do on-the-spot appraisals and fence stolen goods. His skill instead comes into play during the Church election's political maneuvering and vote tallying.

The atevi from C. J. Cherryh's Foreigner series. Forming grammatically correct sentences in their language requires mentally doing simple algebra, and they all have the ability to instantly and accurately count things. Further, their cultures have developed a number of extremely complex systems of numerology, which the majority of atevi treat as Serious Business.

Opal from The Vampire Files used to earn extra tips as a waitress by solving math problems in her head as a bar trick. When she did this for a mob boss, he hired her on the spot as a bookkeeper: a job at which she excelled so well that she figured out how much he'd been skimming off the top, based on indirect evidence in his gang's finances.

Keladry, the protagonist of Protector of the Small, is very good at math. During her page years it's her best subject, and it allows her to assist in engineering projects when she becomes a knight commanding a fort.

Thursday's daughter Tuesday in the Thursday Next books is possibly the greatest mathematical genius of all time. She proved there are seven more even numbers than odd ones, and her boyfriend Gavin discovered a three digit even prime number. Not bad going for a sixteen year old.

The title character of Horatio Hornblower does math effortlessly and finds it hard to understand how other people have difficulty. This makes him very good at navigation and whist.

Kel Cheris of The Machineries of Empire is extremely good with numbers, to the point she can create entire new geometric formations on the fly - which is Serious Business when your entire magic system is based around geometry.

Live-Action TV

Lulu from True Jackson, VP. In one episode, she's hired to be an assistant. When she finishes all the work, another co-worker asks her to solve a math problem on the chalkboard. After a while, she figures out the board was upside down and turns it the right way and solves it.

Kaylee: She just did the math. Zoe: You understand how that sounds? Jayne: What? She killed them with math. What else could it have been?

Face, on The A-Team, is brilliant with numbers. Naturally he's in charge of the team's finances, which he keeps record of in a little black book (not that he needs it — he's really good at mental math).

Malcolm from Malcolm in the Middle can do mental math with Credit Cards Numbers. At one point he helped his dad win at poker by being able to calculate the exact probabilities of the availability of certain cards.

In the serial "The Invasion", Zoe calculates the trajectories to destroy the Cybermen's entire invasion fleet with a handful of missiles. In her head. In thirty seconds. It works a treat.

Adric is the proud possessor of a badge for mathematical excellence, and has demonstrated proficiency at the reality-warping mathematics that is Block Transfer Computation.

The Doctor himself is often described as a genius and occasionally demonstrates. In the Expanded Universe novel Interference, the Doctor briefly transports himself out of a cell using pure mathematics (presumably the same Block Transfer Computation that Adric used).

In the revival (and as a more Hidden Depths example), Donna Noble puts the number skills she requires as an office temp to work in the episode "The Doctor's Daughter".

In the episode "42" the Doctor effortlessly solves a mathematical riddle by recognising a series of Happy Primes.

In "The Impossible Planet" the Doctor works out the gravitational mathematics of a gravity cone extending from a black hole with a pocket calculator in a matter of minutes.

Captain: It took us two years to work that out!

The Doctor: (Shrugs) I'm very good.

Although she had already been shown as intelligent and able to adapt to technology quickly, Clara Oswald's ability to do complex math in her head under stress in "Last Christmas" scares even the Doctor.

Sayid establishes his "good with numbers" cred in the pilot of Lost by figuring out that 17,294,535 iterations of a 30-second message would take 16 years, 5 months. It takes him about one cycle of the message to calculate this.

O'Brien: The core matrix is fried. We don't have warp drive. Garak: Forgive my ignorance, but if we don't have warp drive, how long is it going to take us to reach the closest Federation starbase? O'Brien: A long time, Mr. Garak. Garak: How long? Bashir: Seventeen years, two months and three days, give or take an hour.

Lisa from NewsRadio often does large calculations in her head. People tend to ask her large multiplication questions whenever they can fit it into a conversation.

James May on Top Gear, at least by comparison to his somewhat Book Dumb co-presenters.

Eli Wallace from Stargate Universe is a math prodigy. He is recruited into the Stargate program after solving a mathematical proof embedded in a video game. His math skills periodically come in handy, such as in "Light" when he quickly works out an intercept course for the shuttle.

Put it this way: Rush is an Insufferable Genius of the highest caliber, who can barely tolerate working with others because they can't keep up with his thought processes. He admits that Eli is smarter than him in some respects, and if he ever admits he needs help with something, Eli's the guy he goes to for it.

Near the end of The Prisoner, Number Six mentions being good with figures, though it's not prominently demonstrated — it's probably more for ironic contrast with his resistance to being numbered.

The pilot episode of White Collar demonstrates Caffrey's amazing mathematics. He calculates 64 years of compound interest in a few seconds, then follows that up with the much more difficult task of dividing 600 by 4.

Fred Burkle from Angel is a math genius, and often uses the skill to help the team. Her math skill is so great that, in one episode, a group of demons attempts to cut off her head and steal her brain after she solves a puzzle for them.

Adam Savage of the MythBusters has been shown occasionally counting how many frames of high-speed camera footage an object takes to cross a given distance (typically a foot), then doing a series of rapid-fire mental calculations in order to find out its speed in miles per hour.

In earlier seasons, he'd give the chance of something happening in percentages. Every time, he got it to add up to 100%. (Even Jamie managed to fall victim to Too Many Halves at least once.) After the fact, he did occasionally forget the actual ratios he'd used, though.

Olivia Dunham on Fringe is shown to have an eidetic memory for numbers and patterns, but it apparently doesn't grant her any greater ability to perform calculations.

In Spartacus: Blood and Sand, the gladiator Ashur uses this talent to gamble, and when he becomes crippled, his master allows him to be his accountant.

In Kaamelott, Perceval is an Idiot Savant. He is utterly clueless about map-reading and cardinal points, can't go in a forest without getting lost, don't understand a thing about dates and fail even the most basic logic... Yet he is a goddamn genius with numbers and mathematics; he can do mental calculations lightning-fast, understands games with impossibly complicated rules, and is apparently unbeatable at the shell game....

Nash Bridges had Barry Chen in "Wild Card." He was played by Tommy Chong, but as Nash points out about Barry, the Comptroller for the Chinese Triads in San Francisco, that if he gets involved with anything with numbers, he goes from "idiot" to "savant" very quickly. Played for Drama since Barry had cleaned out Cedrick "Rick" Hawks at poker, and Barry told Rick, "Those hands were golden" when Rick thought Barry cheated.

In a classic Saturday Night Live sketch, Phil Hartman plays Ronald Reagan as a friendly, slightly dim old man for the cameras and the public, but a genius mastermind behind closed doors, including the ability to do complex calculations in his head.

President Reagan: Bye bye! (Girl Scout exits Oval Office) Okay, back to work! (staff re-enters) Afghanistan needs more money. We've got $65.2 million tucked away in Zurich. Now, if we hold it there for another 30 days, at 7.28% interest, that's.. roughly.. $400,000. Staffer #1:(with calculator) $397,200.. President Reagan: .. and 85 cents! I know! Don't waste my time! But.. if we take out only $20 million, we lose.. let's see, let's see.. that's.. Staffer #1: $121,800.. President Reagan: and 16 cents! Thank you so much!

Sylvester in Scorpion. Walter's opening monologue even describes him as a 'human calculator'.

The Kicks: Devin's brother Bailey is so good at math that he doesn't even feel the need to pay attention in class.

Tabletop Games

GURPS has the advantage Lightning Calculator to simulate this; the second level of it allows the character to do things like high-level engineering design in their head instantly.

The Talent "Lightning Calculator" in Hero System lets a character do things like calculate an approach orbit for his spaceship in twelve seconds. Simpler calculations such as multiplying 4824 by 5933 would only take one second.

An interesting variation in JAGS Wonderland: the inhabitants of Wonderland run on literary logic, not physics, but they are utterly incapable of understanding actual math (with the sole exception of the "beings" in the Department of Works). Humans can understand and exploit both, eventually obtaining superpowers. The kicker? When humankind reaches the Department of Works, they'll "break" the world and transcend reality and madness themselves. Not if, when.

Sho Minamimoto, to the point of almost having the whole trope named after him. It even carries into his stats. His Hit Points are 3141 when you fight him at the end of Week 2, and his Taboo Form Hit Points are 5926. Put them together and tuck a decimal point behind the three and you have the first eight digits of pi.

Neku could also apply for being able to belt out the square root of 3 at the drop of a hat (during day two of the second week, for those who wanted to know), but he could also have a calculator on his phone.

Joshua is good enough with numbers to at least keep up with Minamimoto's ranting, though his status as the Composermight have something to do with this.

Dmitri Petrovich of Backyard Sports has this, coupled with the ability to use mnemonics to remember stats.

Ran Yakumo of the Touhou series. She once calculated the width of the Sanzu River out of boredom. Note that the Sanzu River is the mystical river of the dead and that its width constantly changes whenever someone passes through it. In Curiosities of Lotus Asia, when Rinnosuke first saw a computer and learned that it's used for, he interpreted them as being the outside world's version of familiars like Ran, because they're slaves that are used to calculate things quickly. Of course, since a familiar's power is derived from its master, Yukari Yakumo is even better at numbers than Ran, and Ran mentions that if Yukari wanted, she could have calculated the depth of the Sanzu River as well, even though it's known to be bottomless.

N from Pokémon Black and White. He rambles about formulas several times, and is seeking "the equation to change the world".

Trevor from Grand Theft Auto V is. He knows exactly how much cargo comes through the port of Los Santos every year and exactly how much it's worth, and in the "Subtle" approach for the final heist, mentally calculates how much the four tons of gold they're carrying is worth when told the individual value of each bar faster than the bank manager can. Wade even states plainly that Trevor is really good with numbers.

Alice from Virtue's Last Reward is definitely this. She can even do a factorization of a 25 digit number.

Web Animation

Red vs. Blue subverts this with Simmons proclaiming to be able to multiply large numbers in his head instantly. He can't.

Parson Gotti of Erfworld isn't innately good with numbers. But he does have a pocket calculator, which in the game is regarded as something of a magic artifact, and is insanely good at calculating battle outcome probabilities (this is only partially due to the calculator). At least everything thinks he is. Probabilities being what they are, it's hard to prove one way or the other.

Fenton Crackshell from DuckTales has the uncanny ability to precisely count any large quantity at a glance. Originally working at a bean factory as a literal bean counter, he is hired as Scrooge McDuck's accountant because of his amazing talent (and because he works cheap). Later he defeats an alien computer by beating it at a counting contest. Fenton proved himself when Scrooge blasted him with a shotgun and Fenton counted the buckshot as they were fired. Scrooge was obviously stunned at this ability and had it confirmed when he suddenly tossed some coins into the air and challenged Fenton to assess their monetary value, Fenton's answer was correct to the penny. Later, after Fenton took the phrase "liquid assets" too literally and dumped all of Scrooge's money in a lake, Scrooge threatened Fenton with his job if even a single penny was missing. Fenton slapped on a snorkeling mask, looked underwater for a few seconds, then resurfaced and rattled off a number in the millions that was only short by one cent. The missing penny was caught in his mask, so the money was in fact all there. In "The Attack of the Metal Mites," Fenton realizes something's wrong near the end—and a lightning-quick count has him realize he's a Metal Mite short of all of them (where even one Mite loose could reproduce and begin trouble anew). He senses something about Scrooge, and taking a magnet, is able to attract the missing Metal Mite.

Scrooge himself also qualifies. In another episode, he claims to have memorized the serial number of every dollar bill he's made.

Leopold "Butters" Stotch from South Park falls into this trope, multiplying two large numbers almost instantaneously in one episode.

The janitor in Recess is revealed to be this when he easily solves Gretchen's math problem after school. He's eventually approached by the military and scientists... but he turns them down, saying he'd rather just be a janitor.

Rosie Grape from VeggieTales is the youngest member of her family, and also the only one that knew what seventy times seven was.

Bender:(doing calculations on a pad of paper) Aw, I need a calculator! Fry: You are a calculator. Bender: I meant a good calculator.

Twilight Sparkle from My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic'. In part 1 of the season 3 premiere "The Crystal Empire", Twilight gives the square root of 546 as 23.36664289109 (which is truncated, as the last two, unmentioned digits of the root would round up).

Grojband: Trina loves math and numbers. Of course, she hides this side of herself behind her alter-ego, Trigonometrina, as she'd never admit it in public.

Real Life

Taken Up to Eleven in by Scott Flansburg as seen in Stan Lee's Superhumans. He can do extremely complex math faster than a human using a real calculator.

Carol Vorderman originally got the job on Countdown in part due to her ability to solve the Numbers Round in her head.

Her Australian counterpart Lily Serna is equally adept. Some of her solutions beggar belief.

Arthur Benjamin is a Mathemagician, combining magic tricks with phenomenal mathematical ability. In his TED talk he squared a five digit number in his head correctly in just a couple of minutes, prompting a standing ovation.

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